August 26, 2016

We have had a summer filled to the brim with activities, family, and inspiration. I'm just returning from a week with my brother at BYU Education Week where they offer thousands of classes on everything from cooking healthy to organizing your home to the Constitution and New Testament symbolism. This week is always such a wonderful opportunity for me to fill my mind with healing and inspiration. I come home ready to put into action every dream I ever had for my home and family.

And...

I come home to a house and barn that has missed me terribly.

How do we live in a world that is far below our expectations or desires? We all have to do this in one way or another.

For me, I'm drowning in unfolded laundry and weeds. The cows got into our barn a few times and caused havoc mixed with poo. Our chicken coop needs the love of a mother hen and honestly, I'm afraid that cleaning out a dirty chicken coop will trigger in me another round of Sarcoidosis (a lung reaction triggered by breathing in fumes). We have a pool that is so much work. We didn't open it last summer and have never gotten it quite right this summer. And- I refuse to spend my whole life pushing my kids to work. We need some time for play. I need some time for rest.

I need to feel the easy yoke.

I've been trying to WORSHIP more in addition to STUDYING.

For me, worship is gratefully and humbly walking in the Spirit of the Lord. Just being outside in nature helps me worship. Looking at holy art, hearing or singing holy music is worship for me.

When I worship, I feel like I've been bathed or cleansed of all my fears and allowed the seasons and strength of the wind remind my soul that all is well. I feel Him whispering "Peace, Be Still."

I see His gifts, flowers amidst the weeds.

My barn is a mess!! But, I have a barn.

My children and my animals are content and even happy.

Drew works hard out here in the fields. He feeds the animals and even keeps the bird feeders full with alternating bird food.

I went to bed last night careful and troubled about many things. I told Todd I was ready to move to a smaller home on less land. He reminded me that THIS was my dream. I told him I dream too big.

This morning I studied about Christ's first miracle- changing the water into fine wine. I heard promise in that miracle. I thought that He was promising me that He could turn my water offering into wine. I heard a whisper of faith and hope, but those drops fell hollow in my troubled mind. I knew it, but I didn't feel it.

It wasn't until I took time to walk and feel God in my life that I could SEE Him.

I saw Him here, in my weedy gardens and stinky barn.

I felt the love of my father...

And my Creator...

I'm trying not to create a long To Do List.

Today-- I'm SO grateful for the chance to feel.

I'm posting on Instagram @mossmoments the short video I took of the stinkiest place in my yard. I think you can feel the same peace I felt there.

Today- I'm going to fold laundry while seeking gratitude and peace. I'm going to send my boys out to make peace in the barn.

And, even if nothing improves, I will feel blessed in this mess.

Flowers grow beside weeds.

God loves us even as He lets us stretch and grow.

There is beauty all around when there is GOD at home.

This is my front porch. Birds are cawing in front of me and my little kids are watching morning cartoons behind me. The professor is professoring, my teenage boys are soccering, my teenage girls are visiting in Connecticut, and I am here- worshipping.

August 14, 2016

We've been married almost 20 years, and since I was married just after turning 20 we are quickly approaching my "I've been married half my life" anniversary.

During these past 20 years we've endured extensive health trials, the tragic injury of a child, financial hardship, marriage and personal counseling, we've moved to a new state 6 times, we've earned numerous degrees and been poor students, we've managed frequent travel for work, and I spent most of the past 20 years pregnant or nursing our eight children.

My marriage today is better than I could have ever imagined it to be and I know this is partly because I chose a good egg, but also because we both really work on keeping our marriage.

Oh friends, choose your spouse wisely! Do not marry someone you love (it's so easy to love people). Marry someone you respect and admire. Marry someone who loves you so much that he will spend his whole life learning to love you better. Marry someone who will pull you up and inspire you with his conversation and work ethic. Marry someone who treats his mother well and who treats strangers well.

Then, after you have chosen, LOVE HIM! Stop wondering IF you chose right and focus all of your efforts on helping this young man become the best that he can be by LOVING the best inside him. A good woman knows that she is not just a partner, she is a gardener.

It's hard to love if you are insecure. Do you know what is so attractive to a man, to everyone really? A woman who is comfortable in her own skin. I'm not sure when I reached the age that I accepted myself and gave myself fully to my husband and my God.

Obviously, I am always trying to improve. I want to lose weight and be better at so many things. But, I often tell myself-- this is the body I have. I will love Todd with this body and let him love me. These are the gifts and talents that I have. I will serve others with what I have. There is peace that comes from humility. As I humbly accept I am just a normal (not the hottest, not the nicest, not the most organized, not the most talented) wife and mother, I feel peace in my skin.

Letting go of my pride allows me to genuinely love the gifts of others without defensiveness.

I also think it's SO important to date your husband. In my opinion, double dates are the best. It's easier to be your fun-loving self when you are with another couple. I don't think dates are a good time to talk extensively about your children or your problems. You need time away from the rigors of life to just flirt and laugh and be two adults who love each other.

I love that even at the beginning of my religion, Mormons sang and danced together. Wholesome recreational activities are healing and rejuvenating. TV or movie watching dates are my least favorite dates. If you do end up watching a play or movie together, be sure you go out to eat and drive with another fun couple so you have time to talk and laugh. Laughing is so good for relationships!

Honestly, I NEVER feel like going on a date. It's tough to arrange things at home. I worry about my kids' bedtime routine. It takes time and effort to look a little nicer and change out of my comfy yoga pants. If I think about the money we spend on nice dinners I could probably think of ten ways I'd rather spend my money. BUT, like everything good in life, dating is worth the effort.

We went out last night, driving in our huge 15 passenger van (because Todd's little car has no air conditioning). Our kids called us 15 times. Lily had a tooth hanging on by a string. We convinced her to let Jakob pull it. We got 3 scared calls and one call of jubilant victory, followed by three calls of concern that the tooth fairy won't come because she ALWAYS forgets. One call to insure the promise that if the tooth fairy did forget (again) that we would give her money in the morning. And, two calls from sisters asking us not to forget to give them a hug and kiss when we got home.

We stopped at Target and Walmart to return things and buy things. The woman at Walmart customer service said she wasn't used to being treated with kindness and thanked us for our patience. I just held on to Todd's arm, grateful again for the nice man that I'm married to.

We hold hands as we walk and drive. I noticed how, even after 20 years, I still feel tingles when he brushes the top of my hand with his thumb.

I laughed when I noticed his painted pinky nail. He took all 5 girls on a father-daughter Campout last night and they begged him to let them paint his nails. He relented to one nail for one day. He's a good dad.

You know that I'm a natural optimist. And, obviously Todd and I don't have a perfect marriage. We have a regular marriage. We struggle daily with our own special blend of frustrations, trials, weaknesses, even sins that we try hard to let go of. I'm good but very real and so is Todd. He's a jerk sometimes (and I'm sassy).

But, I never could have imagined, as I was preparing to marry this kid, that after 20 years together I could be so much more in love with this man than ever before. EVERY aspect of our life is better today than it was twenty years ago. I would never want to re-live twenty because almost forty is better.

If I could give every one of you a gift, I would give you a man that loves you like Todd loves me. But, like the oil in the lamp of the ten virgins, love cannot be transferred. What I can tell you with my whole soul, is that if you have this kind of love, you are SO rich. And, if you don't have it yet, never ever forget that it IS possible!

Practice loving every day.

Love is how you serve others, love is how you talk about others, love is how you see yourself with grace and extend that grace to others. Love is physical touch. Love is seeing the best. Love is spending time and money. Love takes effort. Love is not merely a flutter in your stomach the first time your eyes meet. Love is really seeing a naked, imperfect man and letting your heart flutter at the best that is in him. Love more!

I wish someone could have told me twenty years ago that it IS possible to be happy in marriage. And so, that is my shout to you this morning.

My name is Jenifer Moss.

I have been married 20 years and I am still absolutely in love with my husband.

Two very normal and imperfect people CAN live happily ever after even without balls and fairy godmothers.

About Me

I am a mother, a Christian, a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a New Yorker, and an optimist.
I love people, happy endings, cowboys, squishy babies, crayon pictures, quilts, blue skies, fingerprints on my windows, clean laundry, sun rays through the clouds, and one certain college professor.
I have 8 children, 1 horse, 5 cows, 15 chickens, bunny that thinks she's a chicken, and 1 silly dog. (We raise free-range children, and chickens.)
This blog, like my life, is a continual rough draft. I'm not afraid to let you see me before I'm finished.
Today, I'm enjoying my moments and LIVING my happily ever after.

Every day you may make progress. Every step may be fruitful. Yet there will stretch out before you an ever-lengthening, ever-ascending, ever-improving path. You know you will never get to the end of the journey. But this, so far from discouraging, only adds to the joy and glory of the climb.

"Oh, the ordinary day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow. Let me be grateful while I may, for it may not always be so. One day I shall fall upon my knees, or bury my face in the pillow, or lie among the sick, or raise my hands to the sky and want, more than all the world, your return."

Mary Jean Iron

Every moment is a golden one for him who has the vision to recognize it as such.